2018 RSJI Employee Survey Employee Experiences of Structural Racism Within Seattle City Government 1 Table of Contents Acknowledgements 4 Background 6 About 12 Key Findings 18 Employee Demographics 22 Accountability 40 Workforce Equity 62 Structural Change 74 Next Steps 90 2 3 Acknowledgments COAST We were a people before SALISH “ “We the People.” LANDS Jefferson Keel (Chickasaw), 20th President of the National Congress of American Indians Special Thanks The Office for Civil Rights acknowledges that we live and work on the traditional territories of the Coast Salish Peoples. We recognize this territory as occupied lands and stand in solidarity with the Native communities across the Americas that have resisted more than 500 years of structural We hold special gratitude to the following: violence that separate them from their land, culture, and each other. Native communities remain at the forefront of today’s movements to resist corporate The community of people and organizations who pushed for the City of greed and government disregard for treaty rights in order to extract wealth Seattle to address institutional racism, Seattle Human Services Department, from the earth which destroys the life the earth sustains. the founders of the Race and Social Justice Initiative ,anti-racist organizers within Seattle City Government, People’s Institute for Survival and Beyond, We honor the historic relationship of the Puget Salish tribes to the greater The Village of Hope, Ven Knox, Darlene Flynn, Glenn Harris, Brenda Anibarro, Seattle area The Duwamish, Klallam, Lummi, Muckleshoot, Nisqually, Nooksack, Silence Breakers, RSJ Affiliates, Department Change Teams, Change Team Puyallup, Sahewamish, Samish, Sammamish, Sauk-Suiattle, Skagit, S’Klallam, Leads, RSJI Equity Leads, Anti-harassment Inter Departmental Team, Lady Snohomish, Snoqualmie, Squaxin Island, Suquamish, Swinomish, Tulalip, and B, Shannon Perez-Darby, Felecia Caldwell, Seattle Department of Human Twana First Nations. Resources, Seattle Office for Civil Rights, City of Seattle Employees, and Mayor Jenny Durkan. While acknowledgement by itself is only a small gesture, truth-telling is an exercise in power. Countering the ‘Doctrine of Discovery’ with the true story The following team coordinated the 2018 RSJI Employee Survey project, of the first peoples, acknowledgement is a reminder that colonization is an analyzed data, authored the report, provided substantial editing support, ongoing process intended to benefit government and corporate America. We designed the presentation of the report, and provided guiding analysis: must reconcile and repair the relationship between the City of Seattle and the Native communities of this land. Decolonization is the meaningful and active Tamar Zere, Kyana Wheeler, John Page, Loren Othon, Kelly O’Brien, Erin resistance to the forces of colonialism that perpetuates the subjugation and McIntire, Mariko Lockhart, Iman Ibrahim, Marcel Baugh, Yunuen Castorena exploitation of Native minds, bodies, communities, and lands. Decolonization Romero, and Brenda Anibarro. questions the legitimacy of colonialism and white supremacy. It seeks to identify and interrogate the social, political, institutional, and capitalistic hierarchy and control exercised by government and practiced by society. Acknowledgement becomes meaningful only when coupled with authentic relationships and informed action. We, at the Seattle Office for Civil Rights, ask that you join us in creating broader public awareness of the history that has brought the City of Seattle to this present moment in time. This necessary step of correcting the stories and practices that erase Indigenous people’s history and culture can lead us towards supporting a much larger effort of decolonization and reconciliation in the Americas. 4 Acknowledgements 5 The history of anti-racist organizing in Seattle city government Racism is America’s original sin and deeply woven into its societal, political, Executive Order 2014-02, which required annual RSJI reporting, Racial Equity and cultural fabric. Early American history details stories of resistance to Toolkit (RET) application on budget decisions, RSJI workplans, council reports, colonialism, genocide, and chattel slavery. Throughout, the 20th century, the Workforce Equity Planning and Advisory Committee (WEPAC) and RSJI organized campaigns used legal, political, and economic pressures to fight Surveys; a 2015 Memo to Directors, which requires a minimum of 4 RETs per and dismantle systemic race-based discrimination and inhumane treatment of department each year; and Executive Order 2017-13, requiring a Citywide communities of color – especially Indigenous and Black communities. Seattle’s assessment of RSJI. local racial justice efforts are part of this important history. As RSJI celebrates its fifteenth year, a review of the Citywide landscape tells In 1996, Ven Knox (then Director of the City’s Seattle Human Services us that we have built an expansive initiative that touches all aspects of City Department) attended a four-day People’s Institute for Survival and Beyond government. We have initiatives addressing environmental justice, equitable (PISAB), Undoing Institutionalized Racism workshop in New Orleans. It was development, labor standards, workforce equity, and arts and culture. a life changing moment for her. She invited PISAB back to Seattle to train her department of nearly 400 employees. Within a few years, PISAB had Despite these efforts, inequities persist. Low-wage workers of color cannot established a stronghold in the Seattle community; galvanizing a movement afford to live in Seattle, as of 2015, Black women in Seattle were the largest for racial justice. group stating they are not experiencing economic opportunities (2015 RSJI Community Survey, City of Seattle), and Native, Black, and other communities Community organizing by the Black community and strategic application of color continue to experience racially inequitable treatment by the criminal of public pressure on institutional leaders and officials with power, led to an legal system. City employees of color continue to face race-based harassment official acknowledgement that institutional racism must be eliminated and the within their departments. Due to continued, and in some cases growing racial Race and Social Justice Initiative (RSJI) was born in 2004. inequities experienced by both City employees and residents in the greater Seattle area, there have been internal and public calls for a review of the barriers that keep RSJI from reaching its intended goal. Since its founding, the City has restated its commitment to RSJI via Council Resolution (31164) which re-affirmed the infrastructure of RSJI in 2009; RSJI’s work is enshrined in the following vision: The mission states: “The Race and Social Justice Initiative envisions a city where “The mission of the Race and Social Justice Initiative is to end racial disparities have been eliminated and racial equity is achieved.” institutionalized racism in City government and to promote multi- culturalism and full participation by all residents.” 6 The history of anti-racist organizing in Seattle city government 7 It is important to acknowledge the uniqueness of the situation in which As we examine our efforts to dismantle racism, it’s imperative that we honor RSJI planners found themselves at the outset of this initiative. There was no and uplift the emotional, spiritual, and physical labor of our ancestors in this roadmap for this new work. No American city or other government institution work and whose memories fortify city workers fighting to make the City a had ever undertaken an initiative that focused explicitly on institutional more racially-just employer and government. racism. At various times since the 1980s, the City of Seattle, like most other institutions, had offered a variety of diversity and cultural competency In 2016, some City employees reported that their colleagues – perhaps trainings. Such trainings were primarily designed to address issues that arose emboldened by the results of a presidential election that left much of Seattle as the City’s workforce diversified. reeling – began to openly show racial animus towards their coworkers. This explicit demonstration of bigotry, hate, and racism led to deep organizing RSJI’s work, accomplishments, challenges, and lessons learned reflect the within the City. A small group of employees of color submitted a letter to then reality of working without an already-established model for action. The Mayor Murray, requesting that the administration direct department directors initiative has made use of a wide range of organizing tools, resources, and and leadership to take complaints of racial and sexual harassment seriously knowledgeable people both in Seattle and across the country to develop its and address them with consequences. The letter detailed the persistence of own model. racial harassment in many departments and was punctuated by employee stories and testimonials. Employees continued to organize and raise the issue Racial justice efforts within the City of Seattle have been historically led through efforts led by RSJI Affiliates, the Silence Breakers, Change Team and sustained by employees of color. While ongoing administrative changes Leads, and many other brave employees, despite the risk of retaliation or regularly result in Mayoral priorities shifting and a change in leadership-level retribution. staff – often exacerbating racial inequities throughout City government
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